Pages

reflections

November 12, 2011

I watched the river from afar, feeling the autumn breeze at my back, tempted by the cool current before me. I watched until my eyes blurred with confusion about what is possible ad what is not. Then, propelled by a drive that lacks logical reason but is oversaturated with a sense of being, I found myself taking methodically paced barefooted steps toward the muddy bank. As I neared the water, my feet sank into a slippery rhythm: step-slide-stop; step-slide-stop. Toes thus immersed in the chilly ripples, I paused and closed my eyes. There, in the darkness of my isolation, I welcomed her lapping kisses. Lulled by the sounds of falling leaves and the river’s gurgling breath, I lingered in the contrast between warm sun on my skin, overtaken by cold winds, dissipated again by warm sun.

She invited me into her melody and buoyant embrace. I dropped my coat back from my shoulders, caught in the bend of elbows. The sum promised peaceful blessings; the wind threatened regret. The river invited me again like the gentle lead of a lover’s hand and the promise of security.

My coat fell to the earth, a carpet of wet leaves, and my body moved forward. Forward more – and onward still more. my skin grew instantly taught from the icy bites, but the river, she sang to me, relaxing my muscles and luring me in deeper, and deeper, and deeper.

I leaned back and let her hold me. We cuddled. I disappeared in her love.

July 13, 2010

When I became a teenager, my mother became politically
active. She propelled herself into the center of the women’s movement fighting
for the “ERA”. The ERA was the acronym for the Equal Rights Amendment. I was
mortified to learn that men and women did not earn equal pay for doing the same
exact job, even if they had equal educational training and the same number of
years’ experience. I just couldn’t believe that our country would legally
support such discrimination. I am still mortified, to be honest. When I was a
teenager, however, I was confident that the wrongs would be made right. I
believed, and so I was carefree as my mother threw herself into the cause.

Mom was often gone attending rallies and meetings. And when
she was home, she read and wrote poetry about women – self discovery,
empowerment, pride – these were her themes. She was busy and happy, and as
everyone knows, a happy mama makes for a happy family. Our house was buzzing
with intellectual chatter. Mom hosted gatherings of women on a regular basis.
The phone rang often and she would run to answer it, light up at the sound of
the voice on the other end, and delve into conversation that sounded to me more
like song. Books, magazines, and documents were scattered about the house, all
touting the same message: equal rights
for all. The frantic tap, tap, tap of Mom’s typewriter was a common,
soothing sound in the house.

Though I didn’t join her cause, this time in her life was
very influential on my own development. I took the message to heart. Equal
rights for all truly meant all to me
– not a gender distinction, but a concept that included racial boundaries,
economic boundaries, social, intellectual, and emotional boundaries. I didn’t
join Mom’s cause because I believed that she and her friends would win the
battle. I was innocent, naïve, and absolutely trusting in the ideology that
right would prevail. I didn’t yet know how unfair the world could really be.

When the ERA failed to pass in 1975, I was 15 years old. Mom
was devastated, but quickly bounced back with the hope that it would pass next
time around. I had already been formed by her efforts. She told me I could do
anything I wanted to do and I believed her. I was strong, curious, and
opinionated. Quickly discovering my own independence, I truly believed the
world was my oyster.

Years later, after countless discriminations based on my
gender had defeated me, I felt that the women’s movement had let me down. I
couldn’t do whatever I wanted to do! They had lied! And if I had known the
truth, I might have made different decisions.

I’ve come full circle now because I understand life as a
series of cycling circles that repeat and overlap like a spiral, all in the
process of slowly evolving into something new. We seldom recognize change as it
is happening, but are always surprised years later to look back and see how
different things used to be. I realize that I can’t do everything I wanted to
do, but I also realize how fortunate I am to live my life with a strong sense
of self and self acceptance. The women’s movement taught me to dream big and
reach for the stars. It taught me to believe in myself, and it taught me how to
stand up again, time and again, after defeat and disappointment. These skills
and attitudes are worth more to me than equal pay for any work I do alongside
men.

The men in this world have homes and cars and boats. They
have wives and an entitlement to arrogance. I don’t envy any of that. I covet
my own passions, passions that bled into me from my mother as she discovered
her own voice, her own strength, her own gifts and the joy of sharing them
throughout her life.

We should always fight for equal rights: it is moral and
humane and therefore the right thing to do. However, we must always know that
we are all different, and in our differences, there are inequities. But if you
believe in the ying and yang of the universe, you will see that in the end, these
inequities find their balance.